Longman Effective Guide to 'O' Level Chemistry

Longman Effective Guide to 'O' Level Chemistry PDF

Author: Eng Wah Lim

Publisher: Pearson Education South Asia

Published: 2007-11-30

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 9789810600075

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This book is specially written for students sitting for the Singapore Cambridge O Level Chemistry examination. A comprehensive coverage of all the topics in the latest 2007 syllabus, as well as mid-year and final-year examination papers, enable students to study effectively and achieve success in their examinations.

Longman Effective Guide to O Level Physics

Longman Effective Guide to O Level Physics PDF

Author: Poh Liong Yong

Publisher: Pearson Education South Asia

Published: 2007-10-31

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 9789810600136

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This book is specially written for students sitting for the Singapore Cambridge O Level Physics examination. A comprehensive coverage of all the topics in the latest 2007 syllabus, as well as a specimen examination paper, enable students to revise effectively and achieve success in their examinations.

Complete Guide O Level Chemistry

Complete Guide O Level Chemistry PDF

Author: J. G. R. Briggs

Publisher: Longman

Published: 2006-01-24

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13: 9789814114318

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The Longman Complete Guide to 'O' Level Chemistry is specially written for students sitting for the Singapore Cambridge 'O' Level Chemistry examination.

An Epistemic Foundation for Scientific Realism

An Epistemic Foundation for Scientific Realism PDF

Author: John Wright

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2018-11-02

Total Pages: 220

ISBN-13: 3030022188

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This monograph develops a new way of justifying the claims made by science about phenomenon not directly observable by humans, such as atoms and black holes. It details a way of making inferences to the existence and properties of unobservable entities and states of affairs that can be given a probabilistic justification. The inferences used to establish realist claims are not a form of, and neither do they rely on, inference to the best explanation. Scientific Realism maintains that scientific theories and hypotheses refer to real entities, forces, and relations, even if one cannot examine them. But, there are those who doubt these claims. The author develops a novel way of defending Scientific Realism against a range of influential attacks. He argues that in some cases, at least, we can make probabilistically justifiable inferences from observed data to claims about unobservable, theoretical entities. He shows how this enables us to place some scientific realist claims on a firmer epistemological footing than has previously been the case. This also makes it possible to give a unified set of replies to the most common objections to Scientific Realism. The final chapters apply the developed conceptual apparatus to key cases from the history of science and from recent science. One example concerns realism with respect to atoms. Another looks at inferences from recent astronomical data to conclusions about the size and shape of those parts of the universe lying beyond that which we can observe.